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Intelligence and negation biases on the Conditional Inference Task: A dual-processes analysis
Authors:Nina Attridge  Matthew Inglis
Affiliation:1. Centre for Pain Research, Department for Health, University of Bath, Bath, UKn.f.attridge@bath.ac.uk;3. Mathematics Education Centre, Loughborough University, Loughborough, UK.
Abstract:We examined a large set of conditional inference data compiled from several previous studies and asked three questions: How is normative performance related to intelligence? Does negative conclusion bias stem from Type 1 or Type 2 processing? Does implicit negation bias stem from Type 1 or Type 2 processing? Our analysis demonstrated that rejecting denial of the antecedent and affirmation of the consequent inferences was positively correlated with intelligence, while endorsing modus tollens inferences was not; that the occurrence of negative conclusion bias was related to the extent of Type 2 processing; and that the occurrence of implicit negation bias was not related to the extent of Type 2 processing. We conclude that negative conclusion bias is, at least in part, a product of Type 2 processing, while implicit negation bias is not.
Keywords:Negative conclusion bias  Implicit negation bias  Affirmative premise bias  Conditional inference  Dual-processes.
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